Henderson v. Carbondale Coal & Coke Co.

140 U.S. 25, 11 S. Ct. 691, 35 L. Ed. 332, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2426
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 20, 1891
Docket247, 248
StatusPublished
Cited by98 cases

This text of 140 U.S. 25 (Henderson v. Carbondale Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. Carbondale Coal & Coke Co., 140 U.S. 25, 11 S. Ct. 691, 35 L. Ed. 332, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2426 (1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

A preliminary question in the first case requires notice : Is the amount in controversy sufficient to give this court jurisdiction of this appeal? What is the subject matter of the controversy? Evidently the leasehold interests held by the Coal and Coke Company. What is the value of those interests ? The pleadings in the intervention proceedings do not disclose it. In the order allowing these appellants to appeal it is stated that, “It appearing to the court that there is a greater amount than the sum of five thousand dollars involved in the property in suit by the intervening petitioners herein,” (naming them,) “ it is therefore hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that said intervening petitioners be allowed an appeal,” etc. That is, the total value of all the leasehold interests is found to be in excess of five thousand dollars; but there is no joint interest on the part of these several intervenors. They do not appear as jointly interested in a single piece of the property in dispute. There are four leases, each independent of the other, and each including separate property. The léssors in one lease are in no manner *32 interested in the property covered by the other leases;. While the'stipulations in the various leases respecting forfeiture are. alike, the' proceedings for forfeiture are different; and, even if similar proceedings were taken in each case, that would not make a unity of interest in the various lessors. The forfeiture-of -each lease is an independent cause of action, in respect to-which the lessors in the other leases' have no interest. One-may have taken proper proceedings to establish a forfeiture,, and 'the other not. The failure of the one would not defeat, the right of the other. Any lessor may drop out of the litigation without disturbing the right of the others to proceed. The fact that they have united in one intervening petition does not give them a unity of interest. It is precisely the same as-though four persons, having independent and separate claims of fifteen hundred dollars each against the company,' had united their several claims in one petition. Even though no objection on account of misjoinder was or could have been made, it would not change the fact that each one’s interest was separate from that of the others, and amounted to only fifteen hundred dollars. There is nothing in the pleadings or-in the findings which shows the separate value of each leasehold interest; and where there are separate interests the jurisdiction of this court does not depend upon the aggregate value of such interests, but, as to each party, upon the value of his interest. This matter has several times' been considered in this court, and the decisions are uniform. In the case of Gibson v. Shufeldt, 122 U. S. 27, the question was considered at length, and the authorities in this court fully reviewed. In it the rule was stated as follows: “ But in equity, as in admiralty, when several persons join in one suit to assert several and distinct interests, and those interests alone are in dispute, the-amount of the interest of each is the limit of the appellate jurisdiction.” There are no affidavits of value filed with this record. Indeed, it is probable they would not be admissible. Red River Cattle Company v. Needham, 137 U. S. 632. If we turn to the testimony, we find nothing which satisfactorily establishes the value of any one of these leasehold interests. While one of the witnesses, assuming an uniform thickness of *33 the vein of coal beneath each tract, made large estimates of value, yet other testimony plainly disclosed that which all experience affirms, an uncertainty as to such thickness, and . also made manifest the expense and difficulties attending the mining of whatever, coal there may in fact be beneath the property. And. more than that, the considerations of the conveyances offered in evidence clearly tend to establish that the total value of no single leased tract, including therein both the fee of the land and the leasehold interest, is equal to five thousand dollars. Under these circumstances, this court has. no jurisdiction of this appeal, and it must be dismissed. ■

In the second case the appeal, as above stated, is by a party who claims a subsequently acquired leasehold interest in all the tracts, the aggregate value of which is found to be in excess of five thousand dollars. So we proceed further to consider the question as to the right of forfeiture,' for if the leases were never forfeited Hitchcock could not by a subsequent lease acquire any rights to the coal, to the prejudice of theHoal and Coke Company.

■ Upon this matter we observe that it is evident, from the. Statement of facts heretofore made, that the claims of the intervenors.rest upon no equitable considerations, but only on the letter of the law. They do not seek to continue,their contract and recover the rent, but to enforce a. forfeiture; and forfeitures are never favored. Equity always leans against them, and only .decrees in their favor when there is full, clear . and. strict proof of a legal right thereto. One condition essential to the forfeiture of a lease by the lessor was at common law, and is, under the statutes-of Illinois, a demand. In Prout v. Roby, 15 Wall. 471, 476, this court said, quoting from Connor v. Bradley, 1 How. 217: “ It is a settled rule at the common law, that where a right of reentry is claimed on the ground’ of forfeiture for the non-payment of rent, there must be proof of a demand of the precise sum due, at a convenient time before sunset on the day when the rent is due, upon the land, in the most notorious place of it, though there be no person on the land to pay.” It is not pretended that any such demand was made in this case. The statutes of Illinois have this pro *34 vision: “Any demand may be made or notice served by delivering a written or printed,, or partly, written and printed, copy thereof to the tenant, or by leaving the same with some person above the age of twelve years, residing on or in possession of the premises; and in case no one is in the actual possession of said premises, then by posting the same on the premises.” Starr & Curtis’s Annotated Statutes, 1885, p. 1495, sec. 10.

Under this section two methods of serving demand and notice are provided: One personally upon the tenant; the other, on the leased premises. There was no attempt at the latter. Indeed, as the lessors were in actual possession of the surface of the ground, and the' lessee had as yet made no entrance into the coal veins, it might have been difficult to have complied with the statute, by giving such a notice on the premises as would have, forfeited the leases. Neither was any notice given at the offices or works of the Coal and Coke Company in Illinois. What the lessors attempted, was to give personal notice to the receiver, and to him alone, by mail, in- St. Louis. There is no' testimony showing that Harrison, the receiver, lived in St. Louis. It is true, in the cross-bill of the trustee in the mortgage of the Coal and Coke Company, filed a year after the appointment of the receiver, and months after the filing, of the intervening petition, Harrison is described as residing in St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 U.S. 25, 11 S. Ct. 691, 35 L. Ed. 332, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-carbondale-coal-coke-co-scotus-1891.